|
The ECB president said the current record low benchmark rate of 0.5 percent "is not the lower bound" and added that the bank's statements were intended "to inject a downward bias in interest rates for the foreseeable future." In theory, a low interest rate could stimulate the economy by reducing borrowing costs on the loans businesses need to expand and create more jobs. Yet the currently low refinancing rate -- the rate the ECB charges private sector banks to borrow -- is not being passed on by banks. That is because banks themselves often have strained finances and are keeping money back to meet new regulatory requirements aimed at strengthening the financial system. So there is skepticism among economists and ECB leaders themselves about how much good another rate cut will do. Instead, much attention has focused on tools the ECB could use beside rate cuts to try to get the economy going again. The bank has also said it is looking at ways to promote lending to small companies, working in cooperation with other EU institutions. However the ECB cannot do that alone. Steps to free up more money for banks to lend
-- by encouraging them to bundle small business loans into securities which could then be sold off
-- would take months to set up. The bank has already cut interest rates, made cheap three-year loans to banks, and offered to buy the government bonds of indebted countries in the open market if they promise to reform their finances. It has also given one form of specific guidance, saying its regular short term loan offerings to banks will give as much as the banks want to take through the middle of next year.
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2013 The Associated
Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.